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Barbell Hip Thrust, Muscular Activation and Performance: A Systematic Review.
J Sports Sci Med. 2019 06; 18(2):198-206.JS

Abstract

The present systematic review aimed to analyze the activation of the muscles involved in the barbell hip thrust (BHT) and its transfer to sports activities that include horizontal displacement. A search of the current literature was performed using the PubMed, SPORTDiscuss, Scopus and Google Scholar databases. The inclusion criteria were: (a) descriptive studies, (b) physically trained participants, (c) analyzed muscle activation using normalized EMG signals or as a percentage of maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC) and (d) acute or chronic transfer of the BHT to horizontal displacement activity. Twelve articles met the inclusion criteria and the following results were found: 1) neuromuscular activation: hip extensor muscles (gluteus maximus and biceps femoris) demonstrated greater activation in the BHT compared to the squat. The straight bar deadlift exercise demonstrated greater biceps femoris activation than BHT; 2) Regardless of the BHT variation and intensity used, the muscle excitation sequence is gluteus maximus, erector spinae, biceps femoris, semitendinosus, vastus lateralis, gluteus medius, vastus medialis and rectus femoris; 3) acute transfer: four studies demonstrated a significant improvement in sprinting activities after BHT exercise; 4) as for the chronic transfer: two studies demonstrated improvement of the sprint time, while other two studies failed to present such effect. We concluded that: a) the mechanics of BHT favors greater activation of the hip extensor muscles compared to more conventional exercises; b) regardless of the variation of BHT used, the muscle excitation sequence is gluteus maximus, erector spinae, hamstrings, and quadriceps femoris; c) the acute transfer of the post-activation potentiation of the BHT is significant, improving the sprinting time; and d) despite training with BHT submaximal loads can improve sprint times, further investigations are needed.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Physical Education, Laboratory of Morphoquantitative Studies and Immunohistochemistry, São Judas Tadeu University, São Paulo-SP, Brazil. Department of Graduate Studies, Estácio de Sá University, São Paulo-SP, Brazil.Department of Graduate Studies, Estácio de Sá University, São Paulo-SP, Brazil.Department of Physical Education, Laboratory of Morphoquantitative Studies and Immunohistochemistry, São Judas Tadeu University, São Paulo-SP, Brazil.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Systematic Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

31191088

Citation

Neto, Walter Krause, et al. "Barbell Hip Thrust, Muscular Activation and Performance: a Systematic Review." Journal of Sports Science & Medicine, vol. 18, no. 2, 2019, pp. 198-206.
Neto WK, Vieira TL, Gama EF. Barbell Hip Thrust, Muscular Activation and Performance: A Systematic Review. J Sports Sci Med. 2019;18(2):198-206.
Neto, W. K., Vieira, T. L., & Gama, E. F. (2019). Barbell Hip Thrust, Muscular Activation and Performance: A Systematic Review. Journal of Sports Science & Medicine, 18(2), 198-206.
Neto WK, Vieira TL, Gama EF. Barbell Hip Thrust, Muscular Activation and Performance: a Systematic Review. J Sports Sci Med. 2019;18(2):198-206. PubMed PMID: 31191088.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Barbell Hip Thrust, Muscular Activation and Performance: A Systematic Review. AU - Neto,Walter Krause, AU - Vieira,Thais Lima, AU - Gama,Eliane Florencio, Y1 - 2019/06/01/ PY - 2018/08/27/received PY - 2019/01/24/accepted PY - 2019/6/14/entrez PY - 2019/6/14/pubmed PY - 2020/1/10/medline KW - Exercise KW - athletic performance KW - muscle contraction KW - skeletal muscle KW - sports SP - 198 EP - 206 JF - Journal of sports science & medicine JO - J Sports Sci Med VL - 18 IS - 2 N2 - The present systematic review aimed to analyze the activation of the muscles involved in the barbell hip thrust (BHT) and its transfer to sports activities that include horizontal displacement. A search of the current literature was performed using the PubMed, SPORTDiscuss, Scopus and Google Scholar databases. The inclusion criteria were: (a) descriptive studies, (b) physically trained participants, (c) analyzed muscle activation using normalized EMG signals or as a percentage of maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC) and (d) acute or chronic transfer of the BHT to horizontal displacement activity. Twelve articles met the inclusion criteria and the following results were found: 1) neuromuscular activation: hip extensor muscles (gluteus maximus and biceps femoris) demonstrated greater activation in the BHT compared to the squat. The straight bar deadlift exercise demonstrated greater biceps femoris activation than BHT; 2) Regardless of the BHT variation and intensity used, the muscle excitation sequence is gluteus maximus, erector spinae, biceps femoris, semitendinosus, vastus lateralis, gluteus medius, vastus medialis and rectus femoris; 3) acute transfer: four studies demonstrated a significant improvement in sprinting activities after BHT exercise; 4) as for the chronic transfer: two studies demonstrated improvement of the sprint time, while other two studies failed to present such effect. We concluded that: a) the mechanics of BHT favors greater activation of the hip extensor muscles compared to more conventional exercises; b) regardless of the variation of BHT used, the muscle excitation sequence is gluteus maximus, erector spinae, hamstrings, and quadriceps femoris; c) the acute transfer of the post-activation potentiation of the BHT is significant, improving the sprinting time; and d) despite training with BHT submaximal loads can improve sprint times, further investigations are needed. SN - 1303-2968 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/31191088/Barbell_Hip_Thrust_Muscular_Activation_and_Performance:_A_Systematic_Review_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -